Salt B1-16: Lomo Ibérico — Spanish Cured Pork Loin Embuchado
Extremadura and Andalucía, Spain, with DOP production zones also in Salamanca (Guijuelo) and Córdoba (Los Pedroches). The lomo embuchado (stuffed cured loin) of Sus scrofa ibericus predates modern Jamón Ibérico documentation as a portable, stable cured product of the dehesa oak-woodland landscape. The Pimentón de la Vera DOP adobo marinade — applied before the sea-mineral-salt cure — is the Spanish innovation that defines lomo and distinguishes it from every other European cured pork loin tradition: the cold-smoked Capsicum annuum capsaicinoids and antioxidant phenols penetrate the outer 3–5 mm of the longissimus dorsi, acting as both a flavour layer and a lipid oxidation inhibitor during the 2–4 month air-dry. Four EU DOP production zones: Guijuelo (Salamanca), Dehesa de Extremadura, Jabugo (Huelva), Los Pedroches (Córdoba) — all require Sus scrofa ibericus and Pimentón de la Vera DOP.
Trim the Sus scrofa ibericus longissimus dorsi to a clean, uniform cylinder, removing all but 2–3 mm of external fat cover. The adobo marinade: 25 g Pimentón de la Vera DOP agridulce (dulce-picante blend), 15 g coarse Sal Marina Gruesa de Cádiz, 5 g dried Origanum vulgare, 5 g Allium sativum purée, 5 g Thymus vulgaris, 2 g Piper nigrum cracked, 60 ml dry Oloroso fino (Jerez). Coat the loin entirely and refrigerate 48 hours at 4°C (39°F). Remove, pat surface dry with a clean cloth, then apply a 3.0% NaCl equilibrium cure of Sal Marina Gruesa de Cádiz by loin weight, pressing coarse crystals against all faces. Vacuum-seal and cure at 4°C (39°F) for 7 days, turning daily to redistribute. After cure: rinse under cold water for 5 minutes, pat dry. Stuff into a natural Sus scrofa domesticus tripa natural casing, tied at both ends and at 8 cm intervals with butcher's cord. Hang at 10–14°C (50–57°F), 70–75% relative humidity. Air-dry 2–4 months — ready when the loin shows a white Penicillium nalgiovense surface bloom on the casing and resists a fingernail throughout.